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GLOSSARY. 



Anther, the polliniferous part of a stamen ; the sac 

 or cavity in which the pollen is contained. 



Antheridium, a male sexual organ, usually producing 

 motile spermatozoids. 



Anthocyanin, a purple sap-pigment frequent in 

 foliage and flowers. 



Antholysis, literally a "loosened" flower, i.e. a 

 flower in which the various parts have become more 

 or less foliacious, and from which inferences can be 

 drawn as to the morphological nature of the com- 

 ponent parts. 



Anthophyta, Alex. Braun's name for the Phanero- 

 gamia. 



Anthoxanthin, the yellow pigment of flowers and 

 fruits. 



Antipodal cells, a group of three cells at the chala- 

 zal end of the embryo-sac of Angiosperms. 



Apetalae, Dicotyledons destitute of a corolla. 



Aplanospore, a non-motile asexual reproductive cell 

 of the Green Algae. 



Apocarpous, said when the carpels of a gynceceum 

 are separate. 



Apophysis, a swelling under the base of the theca in 

 some Mosses. 



Apothecium, the disc-like receptacle of an Ascomy- 

 cetous Fungus. 



Arbor, a tree. 



Arbuscula, a little or dwarf tree. 



Archegonium, in the higher Cryptogams the flask- 

 shaped female sexual organ with neck and venter, 

 the latter containing an egg-cell, the former canal- 

 cells. 



Archesporium, a cell or group of cells from which 

 spore mother-cells are produced. 



Archichlamydeae, a large group of Dicotyledons, 

 including the old groups Polypetalse and Incom- 

 pletae. 



Areolated, marked with little areas; divided into 

 small areas by intersecting lines. 



Aril, an investment to a seed which arises after ferti- 

 lization. It is usually succulent. 



Arthrospore, a form of spore produced in the Schizo- 

 mycetes by the segmentation of the tubes into cells. 



Arundinaceous, reed-like. 



Ascidiform, like a pitcher; pitcher-shaped. 



Ascidium, a pitcher; an appendage somewhat re- 

 sembling a pitcher. See Pitcher. 



Ascus, a form of sporangium characteristic of certain 

 Fungi. It is generally tubular and contains eight 

 spores, the ascospores. 



Ash, the inorganic residue which is left after a plant 

 has been burned. 



Assimilation, as used here, the building of a plant- 

 substance from the nutriment of the environment. 

 3ften restricted to the manufacture of carbo-hydrate 

 from carbonic acid and water. 



Asyngamic, used of plants which are prevented from 



intercrossing by the fact of their non-simultaneous 



mods of flowering. Nearly related species can 



thus inhabit the same spot without hybrids ever 



being formed. 



"Attire", an archaic term, applied by Grew to the 

 stamens. 



Auricle, an ear-shaped appendage. 



A tfon amy ' 8elf 'P ollination > ultimately self-fertiliza- 



Auxospore, the reproductive cell of a Diatom. See 



vol. ii. p. 626. 

 Awn, a bristle -like appendage, especially in the 



glumes of Grasses. 



Axis, essentially the stem. The root is also an axis. 

 Azygospore, term given to the " zygospore " when 



it is formed parthenogenetically with conjugation. 



Bacterium, one of the micro-organisms concerned in 



putrefaction: a term rather widely applied to any 



member of the Schizomycetes. 

 Barbs, the retrorse appendages of bristles, or the 



teeth on leaf -margins. 

 Bark, the usually hard outer investment of a peren 



nial stem (or root) which has arisen in connection 



with a cork -cambium ; actually it includes the 



products of the cork-cambium and whatsoever is 



external to it. 

 Basidium, a cell from which spores or conidia are 



produced by a process of abstriction. 

 Bast, inner bark; a special tissue: soft-bast, the 



phloem includes sieve-tubes and other non-har- 

 dened phloem-elements; hard-bast, the thickened 



prosenchymatous elements or bast-fibres. 

 Bastard, a term sometimes given to a hybrid. 

 Bedeguar, name given to the mossy red galls on 



the common Wild Rose. 



Berry, a fruit the whole pericarp of which is succulent. 

 Bilabiate, two-lipped. 

 Bizzaria, a fruit, part Orange, part Citron. See vol. 



ii. p. 569. 

 Blendling, a name given to a hybrid arising by the 



crossing of " races ". 

 Blossom, cf. vol. ii. p. 71. 

 Brachydodromous, used of leaf-veins. See vol. i. 



p. 630. 



Bract, a leaf subtending a flower. 

 Bract-scale, the lower member of the duplex scale 



of the female cone of Pine, Fir, &c. 

 Break back, a term used by gardeners to convey the 



idea of reversion. Thus flowers break back or revert 



to an ancestral type. 

 Bud, the as yet unexpanded rudiment of a shoot ; it 



comprehends both axial and foliar portions. 

 Bulb (bulbus), a bud consisting of an abbreviated axis 



with fleshy scale-leaves in which food-material is 



stored. Usually subterranean. 

 Bulbil, a deciduous bud, usually formed on an aerial 



part of a plant. Occasionally used for a little bulb. 



Callus, the healing tissue which closes up the wounds 

 of plants. The same term is given to a mucilaginous 

 substance which arises on the sieve-plates of the 

 sieve-tubes, closing them. The latter is of course 

 quite a different structure, and to distinguish it 

 from the former may be called callose. 



Calyptra, the hood which is raised up on the sporo- 

 gonium of a Moss. It is the ruptured upper portion 

 of the archegonium. 



Calyx, the outer whorl of the perianth, consisting of 



Cambiform cells, cells resembling cambium cells; 

 thin-walled, tapering cells found in the phloem ac- 

 companying the sieve-tubes, companion-cells, and 

 bast-fibres. 



Cambium, a layer of tissue formed between the wood 

 and the bark, and consisting partly of nascent wood, 

 partly of nascent bark. 



